A fascinating insight to a selection of the show's best episodes, published to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the popular Radio 4 programme.
Contents: A Note on the Text; Introduction; History; The Gin Craze; The Picts; The Trial of Charles I; Romulus And Remus; 1816, The Year Without a Summer; Hatshepsut; The Berlin Conference; Ashoka the Great; The Death of Elizabeth I; The Lancashire Cotton Famine; Science; Bird Migration; The Palaeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum; Photosynthesis; Gauss; Ada Lovelace; Dark Matter; P vs NP; Absolute Zero; Lysenkoism; Pauli's Exclusion Principle; Philosophy; Kant's Categorical Imperative; Hannah Arendt; Stoicism; Common Sense Philosophy; Confucius; Nietzsche's On the Genealogy of Morality; Al-Biruni; Cogito Ergo Sum; Simone de Beauvoir; Zeno's Paradoxes; Culture; Frida Kahlo; John Clare; Epic of Gilgamesh; The Prelude; Rabindranath Tagore; Tristan and Iseult; Emma; The Anatomy of Melancholy; Icelandic Sagas; The Fighting Temeraire; Religion; The Siege of Münster; Hildegard of Bingen; The Salem Witch Trials; Maimonides; The Baltic Crusades; Rumi's Poetry; Titus Oates and His 'Popish Plot'; Zoroastrianism; The Putney Debates; Margery Kempe and English Mysticism; List of Programmes to Date
Melvyn Bragg, Baron Bragg, FRSL, FRTS (born 6 October 1939) is an English author, broadcaster and media personality who, aside from his many literary endeavours, is perhaps most recognised for his work on The South Bank Show.
Bragg is a prolific novelist and writer of non-fiction, and has written a number of television and film screenplays. Some of his early television work was in collaboration with Ken Russell, for whom he wrote the biographical dramas The Debussy Film (1965) and Isadora Duncan, the Biggest Dancer in the World (1967), as well as Russell's film about Tchaikovsky, The Music Lovers (1970). He is president of the National Academy of Writing. His 2008 novel, Remember Me is a largely autobiographical story.
He is also a Vice President of the Friends of the British Library, a charity set up to provide funding support to the British Library.
So like I didn’t fully read this read this BUT I do listen to this podcast several times a week on my commute and while hanging out with my baby these days- they have an extensive back catalogue (twenty years!) and it’s all online and bless them and I feel like I should get credit that I AM participating intellectual thought and conversation in my off time it’s just of the auditory variety more these days so my hands are free for the baby! Best recent episodes I’ve listened to ps: Hegel’s Theory of History, Iris Murdoch, Emma, and Kant’s Categorical Imperative.
Radio 4 is one of the last remaining manifestations of British civilization, and 'In Our Time' is the jewel in its crown. Melvyn Bragg and three academics get together and discuss a subject just because it is interesting ('relevance' is apparently banned - it is not something that needs to be searched for, and if it is there the readers will notice). The subjects are many and various, from Quantum Mechanics to the poetry of Rumi, and many points in between with the conversation seldom less than sparkling. This book produces summaries of around 50 of the episodes. On the radio it is rarely less than diverting, in book form the reported conversation can lose a little. Most of the episodes are about talking around, and illuminating, a subject. They are not there to advance an argument as such and as a result the written notes can seem a little meandering, if interesting. So check out the radio version, the book is very much optional. (One of the pleasing features of the book is the high regard in which it holds academics for their ability to explain complex ideas in accessible ways, with the somewhat sorry exception of philosophers, who do unfortunately persist in speaking a language all of their own).
Very cool book! I read it one chapter at a time for about a month and a half, and it was very fun to wake up and learn about something completely new every morning from a wide range of topics, especially enjoyed when the chapters featured some of my lecturers as the studio guests!
An interesting collection of edited discussions from the radio show In Our Time. Being a more visual person, I rarely am able to follow radio shows or podcasts as closely as I would like.
This companion is quite fascinating, as it condense the discussion of a wide and fascinating array of shows and topics. I think they've chosen the episodes quite well, not necessarily showcasing the most famous histories or stories, but also giving lesser known tidbits a chance to shine.